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Total Issues: 3

Emu Review started in the fall of 1997 as a byproduct of its mother
organization, the English Majors Union (EMU). The organization was
created to foster a conducive environment for English majors at the
University of Vermont. "On hiatus" as of 2002.

A reprint magazine of high literary standards, describing itself as "a
continuing anthology" with "nothing condensed or synposized." It ran for
at least three years. Although much of the contents were non-fiction or
poetry, writers of fiction represented with short stories or novel
extracts include Sherwood Anderson, Stephen Crane, Bret Harte, O. Henry,
James Joyce, Rudyard Kipling, Jack London, Guy de Maupassant, Frank
Norris, Leo Tolstoy, Mark Twain, Emile Zola. The LoC register this as a
book/anthology, not a periodical.

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Caused a stir when it was revealed in 1967 it had been part funded by
the CIA! A literary and critical review of the arts, it also published
much fiction including work by Bertolt Brecht, Albert Camus, Jorge Luis
Borges, Harold Pinter, Alan Sillitoe, Paul Bowles, Lawrence Durrell,
Boris Pasternak, Vladimir Nabokov, Saul Bellow, William Faulkner, Robert
Penn Warren, J. G. Ballard. Circulation peaked at about 40,000 in early
1960s.

Total Issues: 5

Total Issues: 18?

Subtitled "A Series of Original Comic, Terrific, and Legendary Tales",
Endless Entertainment was a short lived competitor to John Limbird's
successful The Mirror of Literature, Amusement and Instruction, a
lower-class periodical published in imitation of Blackwood's and
tended towards the weird and the sensational

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Total Issues: 359

Contained many articles on travel and topography, but also copious
fiction; in some ways, this was the British publication which pointed
the way towards the later Strand Magazine. Authors include Thomas Hardy,
Henry James, Stanley J. Weyman, Max Pemberton, etc.

The simultaneous American edition was retitled New Illustrated Magazine
from Feb-1897 - Sep-1901.